BoatGuy
Angler
I received this from a concerned angler and I thought I'd pass it along.
There is an issue with rec scup regs for this year. Here is a synopsis:
- There was a recommendation for a 56% reduction from last year to meet the RHL for 2022. The Council and Board recommended a size increase of one inch, which is predicted to result in a reduction of less than 30%.
- NMFS has not accepted these measures, and as a result has proposed to close federal waters to scup fishing, which will also preclude vessels holding a federal permit from catching scup anywhere. A federal waters closure will cause significant problems for the majority of the rec sector.
- Scup are currently at double the target biomass, at 400 million pounds. Average estimated harvest from 2018 to 2021 was under 13 million pounds. With the proposed reduction, 2022 rec harvest should be less than 10 million pounds.
- Reducing scup harvest by half when the biomass is double the target is completely outrageous, and can only increase the public's distrust of and frustration with the management process.
As with sea bass, the only potential solution to this action by the Service is an overwhelming public outcry. Only a very large number of comments has a chance of resulting in a change.
Public comment for the scup and sea bass rules is open until Tuesday, may 3rd. Everyone that has the slightest interest in scup should write an email based on the above points in their own words, or at the very least send the basic comment listed below, before that date. They should also be encouraging everyone they know to submit a comment along these lines. Add or change a few features to personalize your comment. Use the following link for comment:
Regulations.gov
Congressional representatives should also be contacted and urged to pressure the Secretary of Commerce to ease this action. Political pressure on elected officials is the best avenue available to get this changed. Take the time to write to your state senators, and your congressional representatives to urge them to lean on the Secretary of Commerce.
Sample Letter:
I am writing to encourage NMFS to reconsider the decision to close scup in federal waters. With the biomass at double the target, 400 million pounds, and the potential harvest of less than10 million pounds, it is difficult to understand the need for a reduction of over 50% in harvest over the past three years average. Such action will only serve to further degrade my confidence in the realistic and efficient mechanism of the management process, especially after the drastic change in the MRIP process that has wildly increased recreational harvest limits, but the biomass remains well over what we are expected to maintain.
The extreme socioeconomic impact that these measures will inflict on the sector are punishing, and offer no hope for recreational fishermen after all of the sacrifices that they have made across this and other species. The Service does not hesitate to take decisive measures when a fishery falls below the threshold biomass, but cannot see the sense in using a large surplus of biomass to ease the impact of a reduction in harvest that is required due to an inflexible management process. The difference of harvesting a part of one percent of the biomass will go a long way in repairing the faith and investment that the recreational community has in the way the Service treats both the fishery and the user groups.
There is an issue with rec scup regs for this year. Here is a synopsis:
- There was a recommendation for a 56% reduction from last year to meet the RHL for 2022. The Council and Board recommended a size increase of one inch, which is predicted to result in a reduction of less than 30%.
- NMFS has not accepted these measures, and as a result has proposed to close federal waters to scup fishing, which will also preclude vessels holding a federal permit from catching scup anywhere. A federal waters closure will cause significant problems for the majority of the rec sector.
- Scup are currently at double the target biomass, at 400 million pounds. Average estimated harvest from 2018 to 2021 was under 13 million pounds. With the proposed reduction, 2022 rec harvest should be less than 10 million pounds.
- Reducing scup harvest by half when the biomass is double the target is completely outrageous, and can only increase the public's distrust of and frustration with the management process.
As with sea bass, the only potential solution to this action by the Service is an overwhelming public outcry. Only a very large number of comments has a chance of resulting in a change.
Public comment for the scup and sea bass rules is open until Tuesday, may 3rd. Everyone that has the slightest interest in scup should write an email based on the above points in their own words, or at the very least send the basic comment listed below, before that date. They should also be encouraging everyone they know to submit a comment along these lines. Add or change a few features to personalize your comment. Use the following link for comment:
Regulations.gov
Congressional representatives should also be contacted and urged to pressure the Secretary of Commerce to ease this action. Political pressure on elected officials is the best avenue available to get this changed. Take the time to write to your state senators, and your congressional representatives to urge them to lean on the Secretary of Commerce.
Sample Letter:
I am writing to encourage NMFS to reconsider the decision to close scup in federal waters. With the biomass at double the target, 400 million pounds, and the potential harvest of less than10 million pounds, it is difficult to understand the need for a reduction of over 50% in harvest over the past three years average. Such action will only serve to further degrade my confidence in the realistic and efficient mechanism of the management process, especially after the drastic change in the MRIP process that has wildly increased recreational harvest limits, but the biomass remains well over what we are expected to maintain.
The extreme socioeconomic impact that these measures will inflict on the sector are punishing, and offer no hope for recreational fishermen after all of the sacrifices that they have made across this and other species. The Service does not hesitate to take decisive measures when a fishery falls below the threshold biomass, but cannot see the sense in using a large surplus of biomass to ease the impact of a reduction in harvest that is required due to an inflexible management process. The difference of harvesting a part of one percent of the biomass will go a long way in repairing the faith and investment that the recreational community has in the way the Service treats both the fishery and the user groups.
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